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Gentleman's Magazine 1840 part 2 p.157
the general rule. The attempt to trace out the harmony and
the proportions of Gothic architecture to their true source
is creditable to Mr. Billings, and will be sufficient to
place his name high upon the list of the scientific writers
on the architectural styles.
One extract more and we will conclude:-
"We allude to the east end of the cathedral, (the author is
apeaking of Carlisle) the gem of the building. By
examination it will be found that an equilateral triangle,
whose base is the whole width of the cathedral, comprised
the total height of the east end to the point of the gable.
This cannot be refuted; and if it were attempted, we could
refer triumphaantly to the upper window in the gable, where
that form is repeated four times. Although it may be as well
to avoid the question of symbolical forms, the idea that
this window was intended to convey a type of unity of the
Trinity - all coequal, neither superior or inferior, so
forcibly strikes the imagination, that we cannot refrain
from expressing our belief that the architect designed it
with that intention."
We have no doubt that the window in question was designed
with the very object which Mr. Billings alludes, - the
architectural "three in one;" so aptly designated by the
late John Carter, and to be met with in some shape or other
in every early structure, was by that eminent writer always
judged to be an emblem of the sacred Trinity. The doctrines
of the Trinity and the Atonement were never lost sight of in
our ancient churches. The repeated occurrence of the
triplication of parts, held and bound together by a common
band of union, is seen in the windows, the cusps, the
columns, the mouldings, and the ground plan; and the form of
a cross is equally conspicuous and predominating, showing
incontrovertibly that even the fabric of an ancient church
bore testimony to the Catholicity of the doctrines which it
was erected to support and promulgate.
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